to be completely destroyed
A Chinese idiom, Pinyin is pi à NJI à B à Hu í, meaning that no soldier has come back; it describes the total annihilation of the army. From Yellow Crane Tower.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Huang He Lou (Yellow Crane Tower) written by Wu Ming Shi in Yuan Dynasty: "poor Dao worships the wind, Zhou Yu raises a fire, Huang Gai feigns surrender, burns Cao Bing 830000, and never comes back."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: the whole army is annihilated, a piece of armor is not left, and a piece of armor is not returned
Idiom usage
It is used as attributive and complement to describe the annihilation of the whole army. Chapter 57 of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty: there are so many strange people in Xiqi that it is no wonder that many expeditions have failed to win. In the volume of Pinghua in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Zhang Fei said with a smile: "I used a trick to make Cao Gong never return." Chapter 63 of the outlaws of the marsh by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: if that gang of strong bandits leave the nest without permission and lead the crowd to come, it's not the boast of a young general, it will make this thief never return! In the seventh chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty, Sun Jian, the Gongsun of yuan shaopan's battle over the river, attacked Liu Biao: I have a word that makes the armies of Jiangdong never return. Chapter 77 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "if you are willing to give ten thousand soldiers, you will make the Qin soldiers never return."
Chinese PinYin : piàn jiǎ bù huí
to be completely destroyed
behave in a noisy , gay and boisterous manner. xī pí xiào liǎn
Little talent and little wisdom. cāi bó zhì qiǎn
Distinguish the sun from the fire. liè huǒ biàn rì
no end of trouble for the future. hòu huàn wú qióng